Atlantic staff writer Frank Foer interviews Damion Thomas about athletes moving from a position of apathy to engagement
Three Centuries After His Beheading, a Kinder, Gentler Blackbeard Emerges
Recent discoveries cast a different light on the most famous—and most feared—pirate of the early 18th century
The Future Is Bright If More Teens Could Think About High School the Way Kavya Kopparapu Does
Cellist Yo-Yo Ma talks with the founder of the Girls Computing League about the promise of her generation
A Veteran Combat Photographer Recalls His Most Memorable Shots
Originally stuck in a darkroom, Jeremy Lock traveled the world capturing life on the front lines and the homefront
Prehistoric Angolan “Sea Monsters” Take Up Residence at the Natural History Museum
The new fossil exhibition spotlights the majestic marine predators that swept into the South Atlantic shortly after it formed
Astrophysicist Michelle Thaller on Understanding Our Place in the Universe
Autodesk vice president Brian Mathews talks with the NASA science communicator about the search for life on other planets and why it’s important
How the Poppy Came to Symbolize World War I
The red flowers blooming on a battlefield in Belgium, inspired John McCrae to write the war poem “In Flanders Fields”
Hartley Edwards Played “Taps” on this Bugle After World War I to Honor the Fallen
But the bugler remembered the story a bit wrong. A century later, a curator sets the record straight
The Surprising Origins of Kotex Pads
Before the first disposable sanitary napkin hit the mass market, periods were thought of in a much different way
Top 10 Real-Life Grinches Who Did Their Best to Steal Christmas
These historical humbugs rival Ebenezer Scrooge and the Grinch in their lack of holiday spirit
The True Story of Robert the Bruce, Scotland’s ‘Outlaw King’
Chris Pine stars as the Netflix film’s eponymous hero, who secures his country’s independence but leaves behind a tangled legacy
35 Places to Commemorate the 100th Anniversary of the End of World War I
These cemeteries, memorials and museums around the world remember the millions who died in the Great War
Eno Umoh Is Getting Kids to Think About the Positive Powers of Drones
Latina American writer Gabby Rivera interviews the co-founder of Global Air Media about giving students access to the technology
Major Disease Outbreak Strikes California Sea Lions
Leptospirosis afflicts sea lions on a semi-regular cycle, but warming waters and migrating fish could make the marine mammals more susceptible
One hundred years after the end of the bloodshed, one photographer finds personal connections to the war
Optical Tweezers Give Scientists a Tool to Test the Laws of Quantum Mechanics
Quantum superposition is one of the great mysteries of physics—a mass existing in two states at once—and scientists hope to probe the phenomenon
What Are the Economic Incentives to Invent?
Prizes and patents may fulfill different needs, but together they fuel innovation
World’s Oldest Known Figurative Paintings Discovered in Borneo Cave
Dated to at least 40,000 years old, the depiction of a cattle-like animal has striking similarities to ancient rock art found in other parts of the world
There’s a New Ranking System For Best Countries to Live In, and Norway Isn’t Number One
Most researchers use the UN’s Human Development Index to measure each country’s progress, but that system has flaws. A new index aims to do it better
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